Parts 1 thru 4 (combined) of Sheila and Her Friends got over 11,000 hits. Part 5 only around 4,000. So I've revised Part 5 and added an introduction. Hope you like as much as I do. Part 6 should follow around the same time. Have fun. Your comments are much appreciated.
So, in Parts 1 thru 4 we met Sheila, the telepathic vampire who finds herself mysteriously attracted to Julie. Julie was almost a midnight snack before they realized just how far back they really go:
Friends Don't Eat Friends
(Part 1). In a bar, they discover another delicious karmic friend, Lily, who is connected to them both:
Tip Your Lovely Bartender
(Part 2). Sheila's telepathy is three-dimensional, timeless, and at least among these destined friends, shared, allowing them access to each other's senses:
When We Put Our Minds Together...
(Part 3). To experience the past in another's memory, vivid and all too real, can be confusing. The implications begin to unfold in
Where Are We...
(Part 4).
Join the friends again, in Part 5, to learn about their lives in the 1800's when their love made the bond that is their destiny today.
All of the characters are 18 years old...some are much, much older, agelessly older.
Sheila and Her Friends, Part 5
Where We Meet Again
"Here is the story of a strong-willed girl," Sheila says as Julie and Lily snuggle closer. "A girl who finds her heart's desire one sunny day while exploring the steps and alleyways of Bisbee. This is my story and the woman you now hold so closely, like the events in my story, are well over a hundred years old.
"So let me introduce you to Mistress Sheila on another of her walks, unknowingly on the cusp of discovery and, as these once upon a time tales encourage, her destiny..."
On one of her morning hikes, she sees the girls of Cheroots lounging in their tatty nightgowns, capturing the morning sun, pleasantly drinking coffee, idly chatting. They wave, beckoning her to join them. How happy they look! She smiles shyly but continues to climb the stairs until she reaches the road at the top of the ridge. Hidden by a tree, she stares down at the girls, small and childlike at play on the porch. Laughter and odd curses waft up the hill. Secretly, she wishes she knew them better.
As a proper girl, your Sheila lived in the big house on the hill over there, one of the few with a cobble-stoned road by its door. I was from a wealthy family--a young mistress you would hardly expect to venture into the sun without both a parasol and a chaperone. My father tells me never to walk alone, to bring the maid or a brother, but your future girlfriend wants neither. She wants her freedom to explore, even if being free means danger--shivers of fear on those occasional close calls when she meets a mean drunk or two. (Looking back, I was probably immune from the usual dangers of a woman walking alone might face--most everyone knew who the mine boss's daughter was.)
Unconsciously, she takes to walking the steps that pass by Cheroots more often. The pretty sleepy girls and their friendly waves become a special part of her morning ritual. She does't know who they are or what they do to earn their morning's freedom from the long hard work others must do during the day. (How innocent I was.) It takes an overheard conversation to glean more--"
"You ain't working there no mat'er how much that Miss Betty pays." Mrs. Jones, her mother's maid, tells her daughter as they fold the big comforter on Sheila's bed. "Ain't no place for a woman who ain't whoring, so keep away."
"But ma, Miss Betty said she'd look after me."
"Yeah, wouldn't be the first time a negro girl was 'looked after' on her back in there. Just stay away." She says, their voices fading as they head out back to air the comforter.
Now Sheila is intrigued. She knows from other slips in polite conversation that whoring involves loose women who do bad things no proper woman would dare. What bad things? She isn't entirely ignorant; she understands sex in a mechanical way, one absent apparent pleasure (what a stallion does to a mare to result in a foal). She also understands all too clearly from her mother's countless admonitions that sex (or any contact, for that matter) between a man and woman is only the province of a proper marriage to a suitable gentleman. Her nubile body has other ideas, sometimes aching with a worrisome wet desire, a fuzzy longing she keeps secret. The secrets arouse her curiosity, what do "bad things" really mean and who does them and why, especially since whenever they were discussed, a guilty frisson takes over the inhabitants of the room, especially among the men.
So on her walks the friendly girls on the porch become more intriguing, their "bad things" a secret beguiling, until one morning pausing at the top of their steps, a tempting dozen feet from the porch, she smiles at them and waves. Of course they wave back, inviting her over. She declines, shaking her head, almost giggling and steps lightly along, wishing she could visit.
The sirens lay a trap, relying on her predictable schedule. The next morning as Sheila turns onto their street, they place on the top step directly a silver tray: On it sits a china teapot, six thin cups and saucers, bowls of honey and thick cream (the weather is still cool). Dainty spoons, small embroidered cloth napkins, and a vase in which a long-stemmed red rose proudly stands to complete the elaborate presentation. What better way to tempt a proper miss!
Sheila looks up the long stairs. Heart beating wildly, she realizes how excited she is. Something red glints in the morning sun at the very top of the stairs. Up she goes, step by step, visiting temptation. When she finds the tea service, she stops and smiles, how lovely. Who could be so bad they would offer a proper girl her tea so nicely?
(
Little red riding hood wasn't one of your girlfriend's childhood stories,
Sheila adds
,
smiling wistfully as the thought causes giggles from Julie and Lily.
)
Erma, a small shapely woman disguised as a cute girl, makes first contact, toying with her like a cat its mouse.
"Care for some tea, Miss?"
Lost in her appraisal of the tray on the step, Sheila is startled to find that Erma is somehow standing right at her elbow.
"Oh...hello!" Sheila says.
"Hello to you too!" Erma smiles and adroitly kisses Sheila's cheek, leaning into her like a little girl.